Djonne wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 9:49 pm
Was it a home sleep study or an in lab sleep study? Home study...
If a home sleep study....did you have little sticky leads put on your forehead or around your eyes or on your scalp/hair? .....Nope, none of that.
Did you actually sleep decently during the sleep study?....
.....Not at all, I spent 5 hours tossing and turning and then I removed the whole thing frustratingly, then put it back on and couldn't manage to put the thing that goes in the nose (don't know the name) so it was just dangling on the side of the bed. I have no idea how they could say they had enough usable data with that night...
Now about home sleep studies...they aren't all equal in terms of the data they collect.
If you didn't have little sticky things on your forehead or near your eyes or in your scalp then the type of sleep study you had didn't actually measure/record actual sleep stages or even if you were asleep or not. We need EEG brain waves to determine sleep status or not and the sleep wave data points are gather from little sticky thingies on your head and scalp.
See here for an explanation of the types of home sleep studies and the data they gather.
I suspect you had a type 3 sleep study...or maybe the type 4.
The most comprehensive sleep study that includes EEG brain waves would be the Type 2 home study.
http://freecpapadvice.com/home-sleep-tests
Unfortunately without knowing for sure if a person was asleep or not we don't know for sure if the home sleep study was flagging real events or maybe awake events.
You probably did sleep more than you thought you did but we don't have any proof.
Did your oxygen levels drop much?.....now it is common for O2 levels to drop a little bit during sleep anyway...3 to 4 % from baseline is normal but if your O2 levels dropped more than that or below 90%.....that's pretty definitive for a diagnosis because it should drop much beyond normal unless something is causing it.
AHI of 6 overall but 16 (I forget exactly what you said) when supine...that's actually also normal to have that happen because you probably spent some time on your side as well as your back and it's well known that AHI can worsen when we are on our backs in a lot of people.
Also...this can happen when in REM stage sleep. I happen to have the REM worse thing myself. Supine sleeping doesn't make all that big of a difference for me but REM sure does.
I had an in lab sleep study....AHI of around 12 overall but in REM over 50 AHI. We normally spend about 20% of the night in REM so the other 80% where my OSA isn't so remarkable that time brought my overall averages down.
In your situation...you know you didn't sleep well at all...so we have no idea if you even got to REM where there is a chance the OSA could be worse...because your sleep study didn't measure brain waves. Could you be like me and have rather mild OSA in non REM sleep and much worse in REM but you didn't have much REM to check??? Entirely possible.
Another reason that people should have a home study that records EEG brain waves. It's extremely important that we know if you slept for one thing and if you did sleep how much time did you spend in REM?
It is very common for people to have REM worse OSA along with supine sleeping worsening OSA.
Because you have had multiple people tell you that they witnessed you stop breathing....I tend to think you probably do have OSA at some level...mild or whatever. To my thinking mild vs moderate vs severe...doesn't really matter all that much. I look it like being pregnant...you either are or aren't...
Mild can be just as detrimental to a person depending on how much it impacts sleep or oxygen levels or whatever.
And if you didn't sleep well...the home study may have under estimated things because you didn't sleep much and there's no way to know how much sleep you actually got.
So.......what to do? Another sleep study but make it a Type 2 sleep study and make sure you actually slept (maybe meds to help you sleep better) is an option.
Doing what your therapists suggest in terms of settings...is another option.
And one other option since you know you are having trouble actually sleeping (and it's not a new problem for you just one that has been made worse with cpap)....OTC sleep aid to help out a bit.
OTC Benadryl is the active ingredient in most OTC sleep aids...small amount usually 25 mg which is a teeny tiny dose.
I take 50 to 100 mg fairly often. It's safe for the most part unless someone can't take antihistamines for some reason or other.
I suggest trying the fixed pressure as I mentioned above and if that doesn't help much then add a little Benadryl (generic is fine and cheap besides) and see if that helps or not.
And learn how to spot evidence of arousals on the flow rate graphs...and remember that it is possible to have arousals/awakenings and not remember them but just because we don't remember them doesn't mean they didn't mess with the sleep stages and prevent you from getting the nice normal progression through each sleep stage that the body needs for the restorative powers of sleep to work there magic.
I ran across a good article a while back that explains why we need all the sleep stages and in needed amounts.
While it was mainly talking about what alcohol does to sleep quality...if you substitute "anything" for alcohol you will see what I mean. Doesn't matter what causes the arousals...the end result is the same.
https://www.sleepfoundation.org/nutriti ... -and-sleep
Finally there are 2 kinds of arousals.....airway related (like OSA does and the apnea events) and spontaneous arousals.
Spontaneous means we don't necessarily know what caused the arousal but again the end result to how it damages sleep quality itself is the same. Much harder to identify the cause though and to fix a problem we first have to identify the problem. I have a lot of spontaneous arousals myself...from pain though. I might remember only a handful of arousals but when I do the manual work to identify the arousal breathing segments I might have 20 over 6 hours...and on bad nights I have counted upwards of 50. When I don't sleep so good because I hurt and I do a lot of tossing and turning I already know that I will have a lot of arousal segments and about 75% of my AHI will be false positives.
A while back I had an AHI of 9.4...whoa...for me that's really high so I went in and did the manual arousal counting and 95% of my AHI was false positives. It was a night after I over did it in my garden and my back hurt like hell all night long.
I slept poorly because of the pain and the AHI reflected a lot of SWJ flagged stuff.
Anyway....I wouldn't give up yet.
1....we don't know if the home sleep study might have under reported
2....you have a history where someone witnessed you stop breathing and often enough that it scared them....that alone would make a believer out of me.
I may have to RISE but I refuse to SHINE.